Sex Cathedra: Theology from the White House

Amid the many controversies swirling around the Clinton administration, that
which erupted over the President’s having attended Mass and having received
Communion in a Catholic church in South Africa was soon shrugged off as a series
of misunderstandings. But in fact it provided a highly illuminating glimpse
into the tangled relationship between religion and politics in the United States.

On March 29 the President attended Mass in a church in the Soweto district, where
he came forward and was given Communion by the celebrant, Father Mohlomi Makobane.
(Ironically, photographs showed the President receiving Communion directly on
the tongue, which in the United States is considered by liturgical bureaucrats
a sign of being hopelessly backward.)

Negative reaction in the United States was swift, as several bishops said publicly
that the Communion was improper. Most outspoken was Cardinal John J. O’Connor
of New York, who criticized the action from the pulpit of St. Patrick’s
Cathedral, reminding listeners that not only are non-Catholics ordinarily not
allowed to receive Catholic Communion, Catholics too are not to approach the holy
table if they are conscious of being out of the state of grace because of grave
sin.

The Code of Canon Law, which governs the practice of the entire Catholic Church,
forbids reception of Communion by non-Catholics except in cases of “grave
necessity,” when the recipients do not have access to the sacraments of
their own church and when they share the Catholic understanding of the Eucharist,
neither of which conditions applied in Clinton’s case.

The Catholic doctrine of the Real Presence—that in the Mass the bread and
wine are transformed into the body and blood of Christ—is shared by very
few Protestants. In addition, the Catholic Church understands the Eucharist as
at the heart of the Mystical Body of Christ, which is the very life of the Church,
and one receives the Eucharist only when in union with the Church.

In characteristic fashion, once Clinton had been criticized for receiving Communion,
the White House went on the counterattack, Press Secretary Mike McCurry telling
reporters that Cardinal O’Connor simply did not understand the position
of the South African bishops’ conference on the matter. The printed program
for the Mass that Clinton attended specifically stated that non-Catholics were
free to receive Communion, McCurry pointed out.

At first it appeared that he was right. Father Makobane told the media he did
not regret giving the President Communion and had acted properly. However, he
also revealed that he had simply provided the American embassy in South Africa
with a copy of the bishops’ rules. It was the embassy that printed the program
inviting non-Catholics to receive Communion.

The official White House explanation unraveled further when a spokesman for the
diocese of Johannesburg said that Father Makobane was obliged to seek permission
from the bishop before giving Clinton Communion and that he had failed to do so.
The official spokesman also explained that the reference in the guidelines to
“a special feast or event” when non-Catholics might receive Communion
referred to close family members on occasions like weddings and funerals.

Father Makobane defended his actions in part by insisting that he could not embarrass
the President by refusing him Communion when he presented himself. But, as the
diocesan spokesman pointed out, it had been planned in advance that the President
should do so and thus came as no surprise to the celebrant when it happened.

Before long official Vatican spokesmen also stated bluntly that Clinton’s
reception of Communion was improper and contrary to canon law. However, when asked
if the President regretted having done so, McCurry said he had no regrets whatever.

Reading between the lines, there is a possibility that the event was stage-managed
by the presidential party with the knowing cooperation of Father Makobane.

The most puzzling aspect of the whole affair was why Clinton was attending a Catholic
Mass in the first place. Father Makobane at one point tried to defuse the controversy
by saying that the visit was in no way political but was purely spiritual. However,
Clinton is a Baptist and, when he seeks spiritual nourishment, is not in the habit
of attending Catholic services. Father Makobane also said that he thought the
presidential visit was intended to honor his parish for its role in the struggle
against apartheid. Thus the priest recognized that there was obvious political
significance to the visit.

Another irony of the occasion was the fact that the Gospel of the day happened
to be the story of the woman taken in adultery. Father Makobane said he was disturbed
when he realized this. “But what could I do? I had to follow the reading
of the day,” he asked, hinting that, had he dared, he might have altered
the liturgy to spare Clinton’s sensibilities. He dismissed the President’s
own history of adultery as “American business, not our business,”
as though the possibility of the sinful reception of Communion were itself merely
a political issue, confined within national boundaries.

But Clinton undoubtedly saw the obvious political advantage from such an occasion.
While a majority of American Catholics voted for him in l996, he is strongly opposed
by many others because of his fanatical support for abortion. Receiving Communion
in a Catholic church was like wrapping himself in the flag, and he probably counted
on the picture of that event counteracting a good deal of the uneasiness that
Catholics feel towards him.

But in the end what happened at Mass on March 29 may have been less significant
than the White House response as articulated by McCurry, a significance that might
be illumined by contrasting the behavior of two prominent Catholic politicians—Senator
Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Mario Cuomo, former governor of New York.

Kennedy’s personal life is rather notorious, and he has never been perceived,
nor has he ever tried to present himself, as a devout Catholic. On the contrary,
his entire political career, following the lead of his older brother the late
President, has been based on the claim that public officials should completely
separate their faith from their political actions.

Cuomo, on the other hand, has always been seen as a devout and well-instructed
Catholic. When he was criticized, by Cardinal O’Connor and others, for his
consistently pro-abortion stand as governor, he tried in effect to appeal to Catholics
over the heads of their bishops. The latter, he claimed, had an inadequate grasp
of modern Catholic theology, and he invited Catholics to ignore the hierarchy
and look to Cuomo himself for religious guidance, citing the work of the late
Jesuit theologian Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who is the subject of an official
Vatican warning as to his orthodoxy.

Cuomo also kept a large portrait of St. Thomas More in his office and pointed
to More as his inspiration. But, as everyone knows, More suffered martyrdom precisely
because he rejected the claims to spiritual authority of a secular ruler, and
many people have pointed out that it would have been far more appropriate for
Cuomo to have hung a portrait of Henry VIII in his office.

While Clinton used his African trip to issue an orgy of apologies for American
sins, especially slavery, he is notable for his refusal to acknowledge failings
in his own conduct, even when the evidence is overwhelming. McCurry’s
“handling” of the Communion controversy thus became a textbook example
of how the Clinton White House deals with the many allegations against the President.

With breathtaking boldness, McCurry borrowed a tactic from Mario Cuomo and told
the nation that Cardinal O’Connor, the country’s best-known Catholic
prelate, simply misunderstands the policies of his own Church and that, if Americans
seek authoritative guidance as to those policies, the White House will be glad
to provide it. In effect those bishops who criticized the President were accused
of being theologically deficient (believing that the Code of Canon Law governs
the Church), a deficiency which, once again, the White House is prepared to remedy.

Cokie Roberts, a television commentator, also offered herself as a more reliable
guide to Catholic theology than Cardinal O’Connor. The Cardinal, she regretted,
ignored the Catholic teaching that receiving the Eucharist is a source of grace.
Her statement was breathtaking in its arrogant assumption that a television personality
can authentically interpret Catholic belief, considering one aspect of that belief,
confusedly understood, in isolation from all other aspects of that belief.

But Roberts’s theological gaucherie may have been more calculated than ignorant—she
is the daughter of Lindy Boggs, former Democratic congresswoman from Louisiana,
now Clinton’s ambassador to the Vatican.

Meanwhile, the journalist James Reno, brother of Attorney General Janet Reno,
accused Cardinal O’Connor of stirring up a religious war, a truly astounding
remark in its implication that for a church to defend the integrity of its teachings
and practices is somehow an act of hostility.

But Reno’s audacious charge revealed the barely hidden agenda of the White
House. The President found it politically useful to receive Communion in a Catholic
service, and anyone who objected was guilty of an act of hostility.

If the claims of McCurry, Roberts, and Reno were taken seriously, it would follow
that the Clinton White House is a more reliable guide to the Catholic understanding
of the Eucharist than any bishop appointed by the pope. Such an audacious claim
is also in harmony with the deliberate moral ambiguity that appears to support
the President in the midst of the growing scandals.

The White House’s effort to redefine the meaning of the Eucharist is of
a piece with the kind of “damage control” it has consistently employed
in dealing with the growing accusations concerning the President’s sex life.
Here the President has taken it upon himself to redefine adultery, implying that
it does not encompass oral sex, but also to decree that adultery is not to be
considered a serious moral failing. With the moral leadership of the churches
in disarray, a popular president thrusts himself forward as the country’s
most reliable guide to right and wrong, in effect telling millions of religious
believers that they should abandon the doctrines on which they were raised and
embrace his own newly defined sexual ethic, the essence of which is that merely
“personal” actions are of no moral significance.

On the one hand the claim to spiritual authority is a cynical one, merely
another tactic in the endless campaign to “manage the news.” But
on the other hand it may also be in a way sincere. As numerous analysts have
pointed out, President Clinton and his wife represent the generation of the
sixties that came to prominence through their systematic assaults on all accepted
American beliefs, all respected institutions, managing in the process to elevate
themselves to the status of moral paragons incapable of serious failing. Thus,
when the President approached the altar in an obscure South African church,
he may well have thought he was doing Catholics all over the world an enormous
favor, striking yet another blow against an outmoded system of belief from which
they ought to be liberating themselves.

—James Hitchcock

James Hitchcock is Professor emeritus of History at St. Louis University in St. Louis. He and his late wife Helen have four daughters. His most recent book is the two-volume work, The Supreme Court and Religion in American Life (Princeton University Press, 2004). He is a senior editor of Touchstone.

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